Sunday, July 20, 2008

B.C. Comics Censored

B.C. may be the most censored cartoon strip in America today. Religion--more specifically, Christianity -- seems to be considered offensive on the comics page, unless it's a spoof. In contrast, illicit sex, violence and witchcraft seem to be quite acceptable.


"Question: When and how did you become a Christian?

Johnny Hart: When I was a kid, my mom and dad were C&E Christians -- they didn't go to church except on Christmas and Easter. But they made sure I went to Sunday school.

I was fascinated by the stories in the Bible, without actually having read them. But I always believed in Jesus--that he died and was resurrected, and that he is in heaven.

But whenever I was around church people, I would be really nervous, because I felt like they suspected I was a hypocrite. I didn't want them to find me out, so I would exude goodness when I was around them. There are a lot of good people in the world. I was one of them.

I also had a fascination with nature. As a kid I used to spend time in the woods just looking at things. I would lay in the backyard and watch clouds for hours. The first time I ever got a helium balloon, I let it go, laid down and watched it go all the way up until it went through a cloud--one of the most fascinating things I'd ever seen.

I had this need to know things. Why are we here? What are we doing here? What is this all about? I also had a spiritual yearning.

I would gravitate toward anything that sounded spiritual or extraterrestrial. I got into things like Ouija boards and UFOs, ESP, astrology, psychics, seances, reincarnation, Edgar Cayce, the whole thing. I was always seeking anything outside of the physical realm, because that's where I thought everything was happening. But there was always a downside to these things. They were frustrating--not satisfying. There was no completeness -- no perfection.

Years later, we moved to this property -- about 150 acres outside of Nineveh, New York--God sent me to Nineveh. The property has a 30-acre lake on it--it's like a Shangri-la. The woods are full of rhododendrons and all kinds of flowers--a beautiful place.

There was no television out here. There were some local channels, but we were used to having the whole schmear -- HBO, ESPN and all that good stuff. We got along without them for a while.

Finally, my wife and I bought a satellite TV system. A father-and-son team came out to install it -- and it turned out they were born-again Christians.

We had several TV sets, so every room I went into, these guys would have Christian TV on. I'd go into one room and see D. James Kennedy. I'd go into another room and see the PTL Club or another preacher. I began to sit and watch and listen, and pretty soon I got hooked on it.

I began to read the Bible, to realize it was the Word of God, to find out that Jesus died to take away our sins, to learn about salvation and grace and all this fantastic stuff.

Once I got all that down in my heart, then all of the wonder, the doubt, the fear and the unknowing just dissolved into understanding and peace. I know why I'm here and what I'm doing and where I'm going and who's going to get me.

So I prayed for my wife, Bobby, to want to go to church. One Sunday morning she came popping into the room and said, "You wanna go to church?"

We went to a Presbyterian church over in Nineveh--a little country church with a membership of about 80. But the kicker is, it has 55 kids--a thriving youth group. It's a good, caring church, and nice people.

We became members, and elders, and now we teach Sunday school--we do the whole thing. Bobby is superintendent of the Sunday school. We just put a big annex on it, a brand-new parish hall and five or six more Sunday school rooms in the basement.

Q. How did you arrive at a caveman theme for your strip?

A. My thing in cartooning was simplicity. I tried to reduce my cartoons to the fewest words and the least clutter in the drawing. The simpler you do things, the more genius is required to do it. I used to take ideas as far back as I could take them--back to their origin.

So cavemen became my favorite thing to do because they are a combination of simplicity and the origin of ideas.

I was working at General Electric and doing magazine cartoons on the side for The Saturday Evening Post, Colliers, True and Look--and I was becoming quite a success as a cartoonist. But I could never sell any cartoons about cavemen.

One night I was about to head home from work. I was clowning it up with the guys, and I said: "Good evening, friends. I must repair to my domicile. Tonight I'm going to create a world-famous comic strip." And one of the guys there said, as I'm going out the door: "Why don't you do one about cavemen? You can't sell 'em anyplace else."

So when I got home, I started doodling--drawing little cave guys. I was trying to think of a title, and Bobby said, "Why don't you just call it B.C." So I did.

Then I was having trouble putting characters together, so she said, "You could pattern them after your friends." So I did. Wylie is my brother-in-law, Thor and Peter are two guys I worked with at GE, and two others are personal friends of mine who work with me now.

B.C. is sort of the patsy, the straight man. Everybody says that's me.

Q. Do you consider the strip to be your ministry?

A. Yeah, it is, in a sense. Other than Sunday school.



Q. What do you want to accomplish with the strip?

A. When I began to do Christian themes, that's when I began what I'm trying to accomplish. I would do more Christian themes, but right now there's a balance--thanks to God. He holds me down. He makes it difficult for me to come up with enough Christian themes, because I probably would do it with all of them. But I realize the value in being subtle.

I think the current balance is effective -- using good secular humor. That keeps people reading it -- the audience I need to reach with the Christian stuff.

I'd like the content to be at least half-and-half. But to do that, I must do it with greater subtlety -- like having gags with morals. I want to do them with subtlety and with more "yucks." I want them to be really funny. The funnier they are, the more people remember them.

Q. Do you ever get complaints about the B.C. strip?

A. Every once in a while. But it's usually people who are offended by an antievolution gag. If I bring in a Christian message, they say: "Well, the title is B.C. -- it's before Christ. How can you bring in Christ?"

These things bother some. But otherwise, hundreds of people write me, and it's all "up" stuff. Everybody is flag-waving and saying "thank you" and "this is wonderful."

When we were in Fort Lauderdale, we saw Dr. James Kennedy one Sunday. He introduced me to the congregation and said, "I love it when you put those little Christian jabs in there." And everybody began applauding.

The pathetic thing is that people think I'm brave for doing this, which I'm not. They think I'm some kind of a hero. Maybe it's just that I'm too stupid to realize the consequences of doing these things.

The Los Angeles Times refuses to run my strips when they have Christian content, but they're just playing into my hands.

Q. Do you exercise total control over the content of your strips?

A. Yes. And I also have the blessing of the people who work for me, and the syndicate and all those people. They love it. Rick Newcombe, the president of my syndicate, is a brother to Jerry Newcombe, who works for Dr. Kennedy.

Q. What do you think of the current state of newspaper comic strips?

A. I think it seems devoid of what I'm doing -- of Christian messages.

There are some attempts. There's Bil Keane's Family Circus and a few of them out there who always mention Christmas and Easter. And they're rather unsung--people don't seem to have noticed. But I don't think they do it with the boldness (or the lack of intelligence) that I do.

Q. Do you think Christianity can maintain its distinctiveness when it merges with the secular?

A. Yes, absolutely. Jesus did OK, didn't he?

Q. Do you see a trend to allow more Christian-themed material into the mainstream media?

A. No, I don't. Not from the establishment, anyway. But I think these guys will cave in to the popular trend -- you know, the family values and all that good stuff that's going on now.

People are more conscious of Christianity and their Christian heritage. And I think the media establishment guys, being the hypocrites they are, are going to have to buckle down and go for it.

Take Christian music, for example. The kids in our Sunday school prefer that to secular rock. If you want to pull kids away from hard rock, you create some Christian rock and wean them off of the bad lyrics. And that's a growing trend in this country.

Q. Do you think Christianity and politics mix?

A. Yes. Absolutely. Politics came from Christianity, actually. The values, order, law--the Constitution was framed by Christians. The country was made by Christians. The universities were first theological schools. John Jay, the first chief justice of the Supreme Court, was a Christian. These people said things like, "The only way this nation will survive is if we fill our courts with Christians" -- I'm paraphrasing.

They were adamant about it. They said you've got to keep our elected officials and our judges Christian or the country will fail!

Q. What's the most gratifying thing you've done professionally?

A. Just what we're talking about. I've turned the strip into a ministry. I was almost beginning to get tired of my work until that happened.

Of course, I'm never tired of drawing or doing funny things, you know. It's hard to get down on your work if you're dealing with humor, and especially drawing pictures, which is my favorite thing in the world to do.

I think it's my mission to prove that the secular and Christianity do mix, and to prove that it can be fun. That's really what I'm after.

I don't think I've arrived at that yet. It's always nice to have a goal. Otherwise, you're just sitting there at your plateau saying, "Well, gotta go over to the plateau and do some more drawings today."

It's harder to draw when you're going uphill. Anyway, that's where I need to go."

from:
http://www.hollywoodjesus.com/BCcomics.htm




Support 'B.C.' Cartoonist Johnny Hart From Anti-Christian Bigotry

"Traditional Values Coalition Chairman Rev. Louis P. Sheldon, urges all TVC supporters to expressed concern today about attacks in the media against cartoonist Johnny Hart over a B.C. cartoon depicting the resurrection of Jesus Christ. The B.C. cartoon ran in Easter Sunday newspapers across the nation.



Hart's cartoon has been attacked by liberal newspaper editors and from liberal Jewish organizations, claiming that it promotes anti-Jewish hatred and urges Christians to burn Jewish symbols. The cartoon panel showed a Menorah, with candles being extinguished until it turned into a cross. The panel eventually led the reader to the empty tomb and celebrates the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the grave.

"This cartoon does not promote anti-Jewish hatred," said Rev. Sheldon. "It shows great respect for Judaism and also demonstrates the Jewish roots of Christianity. It is regretful that some Jewish leaders are so quick to take offense at a cartoon."

"There would not be any Christianity if God had not first spoken to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and then to Moses and His Prophets. We are of one point of origin in our history," observed Rev. Sheldon. "This cartoon says only that point in a beautiful way."

While Irv Rubin, head of the Jewish Defense League has accused Johnny Hart of encouraging Christians "to be more Christian by burning up a sacred Jewish symbol," the Orthodox Jewish editor of JewishWorldReview.com, is supportive of Hart's cartoon.

Binyamin Jolkovsky writes of Hart's cartoon: "The message contained is one of love, not hate. I believe Hart is preaching that, despite Christianity being the majority religion in this nation, members of other faiths need not worry as they must in other lands. Love thy neighbor."

"Binyamin Jolkvosky is so supportive of Hart's cartoon that he has called upon his Jewish readers to protest any attempts by publishers to drop the B.C. cartoon strip," said Sheldon. "I urge all Americans of good will to defend Johnny Hart's right to express his religious beliefs in public. If secularists are allowed to silence a Christian cartoonist for his faith, then Jewish, Muslim, and other faiths will be targeted as well."

Rev. Sheldon and Binyamin Jolkvosky are both concerned about the increasing secularization of our culture and hostility toward religious belief being expressed in public.

"We must stand together to protect a precious freedom granted us by God and protected by the U.S. Constitution," said Sheldon. "Freedom of religion is a right guaranteed to us by our Founding Fathers. We cannot permit secularists to violate our rights to free speech in the public square."

The following newspapers have pulled Johnny Hart's B.C. cartoon as a result of this controversy. If you live in one of these cities, please contact your newspaper and express your opposition to their pulling of this cartoon.

The Bergen County Record, Newark, NJ; Vivian Waixel, Executive Editor, waixel@northjersey.com.
The Daily News, Bangor, ME; A. Mark Woodward, Executive Editor, bdnmail@bangornews.infi.net
Citizen-Times, Asheville, NC; George Benge, Executive Editor, gbenge@asheville.gannett.com
The Journal Times, Racine, WI; Randall D. Brandt, Editor, rbrandt@journaltimes.com.
Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles, CA; Narda Zacchino, Los Angeles Times Readers' Represenative, readers.rep@latimes.com

If you live in these areas, please contact your newspaper.

Express support for B.C. Creator's Syndicate, headed by Richard Newcombe, syndicates Johnny Hart's cartoon strip. Please send emails of support to Newcombe at: info@creators.com. To learn more about Creators, go to: Creators.com."

from:
http://www.traditionalvalues.org/modules.php?sid=222

7 comments:

Dr. Russell Norman Murray said...

Christianity -- seems to be considered offensive on the comics page, unless it's a spoof.

For the radical liberal, Christianity is often very unacceptable and needs to be tossed or changed.

Why? A reason:

Its values work against the values of a corrupt sinful human nature which wants much corruption to be normal.

Dr. Russell Norman Murray said...

Those are good comics.

Jeff said...

Its values work against the values of a corrupt sinful human nature which wants much corruption to be normal.

Well said. Wow, you're starting to sound all theological, like thekingpin68! LOL!

But yeah, anything that points to the idea that man is ultimately accountable to a superior/higher Being for his (man's) actions, is offensive to sinful (i.e., unregenerate) man. Of course, this is no better than an ostrich burying his head in the sand, because, whether he likes it or not, man is going to stand before a holy God one day and have to make an account for all his words, thoughts and actions done throughout his life. And the charge will be "guilty." So, without Jesus Christ as his "defense attorney," he will be convicted and thrown into the "prison" of Hell. Any claims of "Well, I'm not as bad as that other guy!" will be useless. Judges don't excuse criminals of their crimes just because they're not quite as bad as another criminal.

Those are good comics.

Thanks, S&T! As a lover of satire and humor, I'm mot surprised that you would appreciate them.

Dr. Russell Norman Murray said...

And the charge will be "guilty." So, without Jesus Christ as his "defense attorney," he will be convicted and thrown into the "prison" of Hell.

Yes, sadly true. I hope we can witness and share this truth effectively on-line.

Unknown said...

The newspaper industry is bankrupt and quickly evaporating. Nothing it does or says matters.

Jeff said...

The newspaper industry is bankrupt and quickly evaporating. Nothing it does or says matters.

DAN LACEY!!!!!

Is that really you??

Wow, I haven't heard from you in a long time! Ever since I used to be on christianforums.com.

I can't believe that is really you!

As far as your comment, you are right. I work at a newspaper now, and they are cutting my hours, because they are doing so bad (not just in my city, but everywhere) financially.

Jeff said...

Dan,

Besides my July 19 post, "China publishing Bibles," where I posted a cartoon of yours, I also posted one of your links here:
Other blog sites